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  5. Impacts of logging on soil organic carbon and heterotrophic respiration in tropical forests in Borneo

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Article
en
2020

Impacts of logging on soil organic carbon and heterotrophic respiration in tropical forests in Borneo

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en
2020
DOI: 10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-10276

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Pete Smith
Pete Smith

University of Aberdeen

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Sylvia H. Vetter
Yit Arn Teh
Michael Martin
+3 more

Abstract

<p>Selective logging is the practice of extracting selected commercial trees from natural production forests. The intensity of logging correlates with a reduction in biodiversity, wood production and biomass stocks. Less is known about the relationship of logging to soil organic carbon (SOC) and how it changes or recovers over time. Empirical measurements in Borneo provided SOC, soil respiration, aboveground and belowground net primary productivity (NPP) from intact old-growth forest (OGF) as well as from moderately to heavily logged (LOG) forest sites. Soil carbon (C) content and heterotrophic respiration (R<sub>h</sub>) was higher in LOG sites than in OGF sites. Moderately logged forest (logged > 10 years ago) contained more SOC than heavily logged forest (logged approx. 7 years ago). NPP was used to estimate the C input to the soil. All these data were used to test the biochemical model ECOSSE (<strong>E</strong>stimating <strong>C</strong>arbon in <strong>O</strong>rganic <strong>S</strong>oils &#8211; <strong>S</strong>equestration and <strong>E</strong>missions) to calculate SOC for the study sites. The model performed well in simulating the soil respiration of OGF and generated acceptable results for LOG sites in the validation process. The results for logged forests showed an increase in R<sub>h</sub> over the first 15 years, with some sites showing either a further increase over the next 15 years or stabilizing at a higher level compared to pre-disturbance conditions for other sites. However, for all modelled cases, a break was observed after 30 years, when R<sub>h</sub> decreased to a lower level (but not as low as for OGF) before reaching a new equilibrium. At the same time, SOC begins to increase. Spatial modelling showed the results for Borneo under logged conditions and the potential of storing C if logging was reduced. Only 22% of Borneo is under old-growth forest; the results show moderate to high C losses if this region is subjected to logging. Overall, the results show the disturbance of SOC and Rh through logging over periods longer than 30 years.</p>

How to cite this publication

Sylvia H. Vetter, Yit Arn Teh, Michael Martin, Dafydd Elias, Terhi Riutta, Pete Smith (2020). Impacts of logging on soil organic carbon and heterotrophic respiration in tropical forests in Borneo. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-10276.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2020

Authors

6

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-10276

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